You may use the navigation bar to select any day since November 11th, 2005. See the most imporant events in the world – expore the recent history on the map.
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The main liberal opposition coalition in Egypt rejects interim leader Adly Mansour's decree, which sets a new poll timetable to try to stop the unrest.
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Fears that Germany’s conversion to renewables could prove costly
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Italian judge orders 49 suspected Latin American gang members to stand trial for allegedly using dogs to smuggle cocaine into the country.
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Illinois becomes the last state in the US to allow residents to carry concealed handguns, after legislators dismissed objections from the governor.
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In Washington a special meeting has been held by The Organization of American States to discuss why the Bolivian president's plane was forced to divert to Austria after it was suspected Edward Snowden was on board.
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A Spanish newspaper has published what it alleges are documents showing Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and other top politicians received illicit payments.
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AIG and GE Capital designated by regulators as "systemically important" companies, a move which will bring them under greater government oversight.
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A criminal inquiry has been launched in Canada into the derailment of an oil train that killed at least 15 people in a small Quebec town on Saturday.
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Italy's highest court will hear Silvio Berlusconi's tax fraud appeal on 30 July - which could prevent the statute of limitations from expiring on one charge.
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The political party linked to Colombia's left-wing Farc rebels has regained its legal status, meaning it can contest next year's elections.
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An Australian DJ behind a royal prank call linked to the death of a UK nurse sues her employer, saying it failed to provide a safe workplace, local media say.
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Grammy Award-winning opera singer Placido Domingo is being treated in hospital in Madrid for a blood clot in his lung.
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Sir Elton John says he is "lucky to be alive" after being diagnosed with appendicitis - he has had to postpone a series of summer festival dates while he receives treatment.
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New Egyptian PM Hazem el-Beblawi begins work on forming a cabinet, with the main Islamist and liberal opposition refusing to take part.
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US actor Joe Conley, best known for his role as shopkeeper Ike Godsey in TV series The Waltons, dies at 85.
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Malta cancels two flights to return migrants to Libya after an emergency intervention by the European Court of Human Rights.
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Chile's President Pinera outrages his critics by praising the maturity of a pregnant 11-year-old rape victim who says she is happy to have the child.
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Pirelli has decided to take softer tyres to the forthcoming Hungarian Grand Prix than it initially planned.
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Credit ratings agency Moody's upgrades its outlook for the UK banking industry to stable from negative.
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Seven people die in a landslide in India's Uttarakhand state, where floods and landslides left more than 800 dead last month.
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Dramatic amateur video footage has emerged of an explosion in Canada following the derailment of an oil train in a small Quebec town on Saturday.
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Healthcare assistants in hospitals, residential homes and the community in England have no minimum standard of training before they are allowed to work unsupervised, an independent report finds.
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Animated film Despicable Me 2 holds on to the top of the UK box office for a second week running.
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Leonardo resigns as Paris St-Germain's sporting director after receiving a 13-month ban for pushing a referee.
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China reports weaker than expected trade data, underlying concerns of a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy,
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Aleem Maqbool has spoken to the Douma family in Cairo, a father and son who are on opposite sides as the unrest continues.
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North and South Korea end talks on reopening a jointly-run industrial zone in Kaesong without reaching a deal, South Korean officials say.
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Police in Australia investigating a reported burglary find a snake, measuring 5.7m, which may have got into the premises through a damaged roof.
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Czech President Milos Zeman swears in a new cabinet despite the opposition of the main parties in parliament.
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More than 2,500 people were evacuated from their homes on Tuesday as an extraordinary flood wreaked havoc in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
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US media group Tribune to spilt its newspaper and broadcasting operations in a move that echoes the division of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
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A fire damages the landmark 17th-Century Hotel Lambert in Paris, which was being renovated after its controversial purchase by a Qatari prince.
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Close-up aerial views of Canadian blast town
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Canadian authorities launch a criminal inquiry into the derailment of an oil train that killed at least 15 people in a small Quebec town on Saturday.
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Italian trio Lazio, Genoa and Lecce face a points deduction over a match-fixing scandal.
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Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's personal security chief and two others are killed in a suspected suicide bomb attack in Karachi.
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Barclays bank is closing about 100 UK accounts of businesses that transfer cash to Somalia and elsewhere, over fears that they enable money laundering.
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A landslide buries between 30 and 40 people following days of heavy rain and floods in China's Sichuan province, state media say.
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Sixty people are now thought to be dead or missing after a train carrying crude oil derailed and exploded in Quebec, Canadian police say.
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David Warner temporarily leaves the Ashes tour to play for Australia's A side in Zimbabwe and South Africa.
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Ethiopian athletics star Haile Gebrselassie says he is entering politics with the aim of winning a parliamentary seat in the 2015 election.
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A spectator throws urine at Mark Cavendish during stage 11 of the Tour de France on Wednesday.
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A group of 17 US retailers, including Wal-Mart and Gap, agree a five-year pact to improve conditions at Bangladesh clothing factories.
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Sudan's ex-intelligence chief Salah Gosh, charged with plotting a coup against President Omar al-Bashir, is freed.
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Swedish police force Undertexter offline after receiving complaints that the fan-made subtitle translation service infringed film and TV makers' copyright.
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Director Ben Wheatley says he is "overwhelmed" with the reaction to his latest film, A Field in England, the first UK film to be released simultaneously on all formats.
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Russian anti-corruption activist and Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny registers to stand in September's election for mayor of Moscow.
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France bans three far-right groups allegedly linked to the death of left-wing activist Clement Meric in a Paris street brawl in June.
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Egypt's state prosecutor issues an arrest warrant for the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Badie, and at least nine other senior figures.
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Britain's Chris Froome extends his Tour de France lead with a stunning performance in Stage 11's individual time trial.
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A Chilean judge orders that bone samples from the deceased Nobel prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda be sent to Spain for fresh toxicology tests.
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Apple conspired with publishers to fix the price of electronic books, a US judge rules, but the company says it will appeal against the decision.
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Australia reach 75-4 after bowling out England for 215 on the first day of the Ashes series at Trent Bridge.
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A train operator's chief executive blames a local engineer for a runaway train that derailed and exploded into a Quebec town, killing at least 15.
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Indian lawmakers convicted of serious crimes will no longer be able to stay in office while they appeal, under a landmark Supreme Court ruling.
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Everton secure the signing of teenage Spanish forward Gerard Deulofeu on a season-long loan from Barcelona.
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Postal workers are set to receive millions of pounds' worth of Royal Mail shares when the company is privatised later this year.
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Police investigating the disappearance of a Glasgow teenager say a body recovered from the sea in south Wales is that of missing Hollie McClymont.
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Hosts Sweden miss two penalties as they are held 1-1 by Denmark, while Italy and Finland share a tame goalless draw.
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Nelson Mandela is responding to treatment but remains critical, South African President Jacob Zuma says after visiting him.
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Luxembourg will hold new elections after Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker announced he would resign following a secret service scandal.
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Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva rejects calls for early elections, saying they should coincide with the end of bailout conditions next year.
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One person is killed in the Dominican Republic as Tropical Storm Chantal skirts the southern coast of the island of Hispaniola.
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A Moscow court is due to deliver a verdict in the tax fraud case against late Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, whose death has strained US-Russian ties.
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Campaigners for lower levels of immigration warn officials could be underestimating the scale of net migration in the UK.
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